Each week night, The Late Late Show with James Corden throws a late-night after-party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind the scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and ... See full summary »

Stephen Colbert took over as host, executive producer and writer of THE LATE SHOW on Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2015. The comedy-variety-talk show is broadcast five nights a week from the Ed Sullivan theater in New York.

Irish comedian Graham Norton hosts his very own chat show, which includes chatting to A-list celebrities, the very famous Red Chair game, live music, lots of jokes and fun from Graham and the celebrities themselves.

Providing comedy/news in the tradition of TV Nation and SNL's Weekend Update, Comedy Central's Daily Show reports on the foibles and of the real world with a satirical edge. In addition to ... See full summary »

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Did You Know?

Trivia

On August 21, 2012, ABC announced that Jimmy Kimmel Live! (2003) would be moved from 12:00 a.m. to 11:35 p.m., putting the show up directly against "The Tonight Show" and "The Late Show", for the first time since its debut. "Nightline" would be moving to 12:35 a.m. after Jimmy Kimmel Live! (2003). The change went into effect in January 2013. See more »

Quotes

Jimmy Kimmel:
Didn't you get bit by a spider or something?
Chester Bennington:
Yes, I got bit on my ass by a spider. And I thought that I had cancer but...
Jimmy Kimmel:
...it turns out you have super powers!
Chester Bennington:
It turns out now that I can climb buildings, and save people from criminal acts.
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Crazy Credits

Each show opens differently ultimatly ending with Jimmy flicking a giant switch to turn on the lights. See more »

Frequently Asked Questions

User Reviews

With a grin that might be mistaken for intoxication, Jimmy Kimmel spends most of Jimmy Kimmel Live seemingly bemused by all the corporate fuss made over his silly ideas (the now-prohibited open bar for the studio audience, his proposal to have a TV monitor on the desk so that he could flip over to competing shows should things become at all dull), and he hosts this talk show much the same way Al Pacino's suicidal ex-navy colonel waltzes through "Scent of a Woman": aware of his own encroaching demise, and free to be himself. The mortality rate of talk show hosts is not comforting to any young upstart, for every Leno and Letterman, there are Chevy Chases, Pat Sajaks, Lauren Huttons, Rick Deeses, Whoopi Goldbergs, Magic Johnsons, Keenan Ivory Wayanses, Chris Spencers, etc., but Kimmel seems to be downright tickled pink. Although defanged considerably since The Man Show and lacking an intrinsically hilarious writing team, he maintains (and relies on) a likeability that patches the often awkward holes well, like early Letterman without the memorable bits.

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